Cicely Tyson is finally getting an Oscar. The 93-year-old, who was nominated for a statuette once before in 1973 for her performance in Sounder, has been announced as one of the recipients of this year’s Honorary Awards. She’ll be recognized alongside publicist Marvin Levy and composer Lalo Schifrin, a six-time nominee for films like Cool Hand Luke and The Amityville Horror. In addition, producing power duo Kathleen Kennedy (who also runs Lucasfilm) and Frank Marshall will be given the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award. The Governors Awards will take place on November 18.

“Choosing the honorees for its awards each year is the happiest of all the Board of Governors’ work,” Academy President John Bailey said in a statement. “And this year, its selection of five iconic artists was made with universal acclaim by the Academy’s 54 spirited governors.”

Marshall celebrated the recognition on Twitter, writing that he and Kennedy, who have been married for the last 30 years, were “deeply honored.”

“Thanks for all the good wishes, it will be a grand celebration!” he wrote.

This year’s batch is a varied group, comprising a fascinating array of figures who make movies tick. Tyson is the sole performer of the bunch. The actress has been making waves since her career kicked off in 1957, quickly breaking boundaries with turns in projects like Roots,Fried Green Tomatoes, and The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman—a TV movie that would go on to inspire an aspiring thespian named Viola Davis. Davis and Tyson would later work together on How to Get Away with Murder. The awards Tyson has won already run the gamut: a Tony, multiple Emmys, and even a Presidential Medal of Freedom. She will again make history at the Governors Awards, as she is the first black woman to receive an Oscar in the honorary award category.

Like the rest of her fellow awardees, this will be the first Oscar for Tyson. Like Schifrin, Kennedy and Marshall have been nominated a handful of times for a variety of best-picture contenders, including The Sixth Sense and The Color Purple—though they have never managed to clinch the category (not yet, anyway). Levy, who has worked on campaigns for several Steven Spielberg movies stretching all the way back to Close Encounters of the Third Kind, will be the first publicist to win this Oscar.

If You Love Old Hollywood Gossip, Put These Books, Films, and Podcasts on Your List

You Must Remember This

Karina Longworth’s must-listen podcast is a treasure trove of forgotten and secret stories from Hollywood’s early decades. In its latest season, Longworth explores Hollywood Babylon, experimental filmmaker Kenneth Anger’s 1959 book that purportedly had all the juiciest gossip of Hollywood’s golden age. In the series, Longworth dives right into the rumors, sussing out Anger’s wildest stories about figures like Fatty Arbuckle and silent-film star Olive Thomas.

Photo: Photograph by Emily Perl. Courtesy of Panoply (cover art).

Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood

In the upcoming documentary, which opens in New York on August 3, filmmaker Matt Tyrnauer tells the story of Scotty Bowers, a Hollywood pimp who claims he set up old Hollywood’s closeted stars with private trysts. His claims are grand and sexy. From Spencer Tracy to Katharine Hepburn to Cary Grant, there’s no limit to the stars Scotty alleges he worked with.
(Photo: Left, Scotty and friends; Right, Scotty in uniform.)

Photo: Photos courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood

In this 2005 book, author Donald Bogle dives into the history and lore of famous black actors in Hollywood’s earliest decades, from Stepin Fetchit to Dorothy Dandridge. Bogle traces what it was really like being a black star at the time, shedding light on the rise of figures like Lena Horne and Sammy Davis Jr.

Photo: Courtesy of One World.

Bring on the Empty Horses

In 1975, Oscar-winning actor David Niven released this book, a collection of his favorite star-studded run-ins in his years in the business. There are detailed passages of his friendships with Clark Gable and Greta Garbo, charming and thrilling anecdotes of his lengthy career and personal life.

Photo: Courtesy of Hodder & Stoughton.

Tab Hunter Confidential

In his autobiography (later made into a documentary, available on Netflix), actor Tab Hunter spoke freely about his acting and singing career, which began in the 1950s. The actor also shed light on his personal life, revealing his relationships with men like Pyscho star Anthony Perkins and ice-skater Ronnie Robertson. He also dished on what it was like working with studio heads like Jack Warner and getting set up on publicity tours with actresses like Natalie Wood and Debbie Reynolds. (Photo: Tab Hunter photographed in an LA court during the trial of Confidential magazine in August 1957.)

Photo: From Everett Collection.

Tinseltown: Murder, Morphine, and Madness at the Dawn of Hollywood

This 2014 book by William Mann is a nifty crossover for old Hollywood and true-crime fans, a deep dive on the 1922 murder of noted director William Desmond Taylor. Tinseltown also folds in rumors and figures of the era, making special note of power players like Paramount Pictures founder Adolph Zukor (whose nickname was simply “Creepy”) and many, many others.

Photo: Courtesy of Harper Paperbacks.

The Sewing Circle

Hollywood is the sort of place where actors can win awards for playing members of the L.G.B.T.Q. community, but openly gay actors risk possibly being thrust out of the business. Actors largely kept their mouths shut about their sexuality in the days of Old Hollywood, leaving a few clues to history as to how they might have truly identified. In the 1995 book The Sewing Circle, author Axel Madsen writes about the rumored bisexual or lesbian actresses in the industry, from Garbo to Crawford, detailing how they navigated their private lives away from the public eye. The book’s title is the nickname for the industry’s closeted community. (Photo: Greta Garbo in the 1931 film Susan Lenox- Her Fall and Rise.)

Photo: Bettmann

You Must Remember This

Karina Longworth’s must-listen podcast is a treasure trove of forgotten and secret stories from Hollywood’s early decades. In its latest season, Longworth explores Hollywood Babylon, experimental filmmaker Kenneth Anger’s 1959 book that purportedly had all the juiciest gossip of Hollywood’s golden age. In the series, Longworth dives right into the rumors, sussing out Anger’s wildest stories about figures like Fatty Arbuckle and silent-film star Olive Thomas.

Photograph by Emily Perl. Courtesy of Panoply (cover art).

Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood

In the upcoming documentary, which opens in New York on August 3, filmmaker Matt Tyrnauer tells the story of Scotty Bowers, a Hollywood pimp who claims he set up old Hollywood’s closeted stars with private trysts. His claims are grand and sexy. From Spencer Tracy to Katharine Hepburn to Cary Grant, there’s no limit to the stars Scotty alleges he worked with.
(Photo: Left, Scotty and friends; Right, Scotty in uniform.)

Photos courtesy of Greenwich Entertainment.

Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood

In this 2005 book, author Donald Bogle dives into the history and lore of famous black actors in Hollywood’s earliest decades, from Stepin Fetchit to Dorothy Dandridge. Bogle traces what it was really like being a black star at the time, shedding light on the rise of figures like Lena Horne and Sammy Davis Jr.

Courtesy of One World.

Bring on the Empty Horses

In 1975, Oscar-winning actor David Niven released this book, a collection of his favorite star-studded run-ins in his years in the business. There are detailed passages of his friendships with Clark Gable and Greta Garbo, charming and thrilling anecdotes of his lengthy career and personal life.

Courtesy of Hodder & Stoughton.

Hedda Hopper: The Whole Truth and Nothing But

Few people have frightened Hollywood as much as Hedda Hopper, the imperious, conservative gossip queen (and hat obsessive) who dug up dirt on all of the industry’s biggest stars. Her book opens on one of the era’s biggest names: Elizabeth Taylor, an actress Hopper knew for most of her life. From there, she digs into stories about plenty of other top performers, including Charlie Chaplin and Frank Sinatra.

Courtesy of Graymalkin Media, LLC.

The First Lady of Hollywood: A Biography of Louella Parsons

Speaking of gossip queens . . . Parsons was the self-proclaimed “first movie columnist in the world” well before Hopper began her reign. The rumor mill O.G. kept tabs on the goings-on of Hollywood’s elite, to the tune of millions of readers. This 2005 book by Samantha Barbas chronicles Parsons’s Illinois upbringing and her arrival in Los Angeles, later going deep on her feud with Orson Welles. (Photo: Louella poses with Mickey Hargitay, Jayne Mansfield and Jimmy McHugh in the 1950s.)

From Everett Collection.

Memo from David O. Selznick

In this 1972 book, film historian Rudy Behlmer compiles memos Selznick dictated over the course of his decades-long career as one of Hollywood’s top producers and studio executives, responsible for guiding indelible classics like Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca and the original A Star Is Born. He also shepherded Gone with the Wind, the subject of numerous memos in this book. The memos contain Selznick’s thoughts about everything, from his irritation with painfully obvious music scores to the “au natural” appeal of Ingrid Bergman’s eyebrows.

Courtesy of Modern Library.

Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer

Few film figures have ever been as powerful as Louis B. Mayer, the producer and co-founder of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios (MGM). He was a regular star-maker, developing careers for talented young things like Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. But for all his intelligence and generosity, he could also be domineering and fearsome, all of which is covered in this 2005 book by Scott Eyman. (Photo: Meyer in California, circa 1935.)

Rita Moreno: A Memoir

The EGOT-winning actress tells her remarkable life story in this autobiography. While there’s nothing gossipy about that, the actress does also share details about watching Gene Kelly dance through a 103-degree fever on the set of Singin’ in the Rain, and dodging a flirtatious Jack Nicholson on the studio lot—as well as her torrid, years-long affair with Marlon Brando, and a disappointing sexual rendezvous with Elvis Presley.

Courtesy of Celebra.

Mommie Dearest

Fans of Joan Crawford were in for the exposé of a lifetime when the star’s daughter released a memoir detailing what life was like in the Crawford household. Christina Crawford, Joan’s adoptive daughter, accuses her mother of being an abusive alcoholic, so aggressively controlling that she lost her mind over the sight of wire hangers (a moment that was heavily dramatized in the filmed version of the book, starring Faye Dunaway as the late leading lady). And as an honorable mention: the FX series Feud lightly touches on this material, then dives into Crawford’s notorious spats with Bette Davis. It’s a juicy, and at times quite moving, depiction of two stars at loggerheads.

Courtesy of William Morrow & Co.

Scandals of Classic Hollywood: Sex, Deviance, and Drama from the Golden Age of American Cinema

In this 2014 book, author Anne Helen Petersen dives into some of Hollywood’s more sensational stories, reaching all the way back to the heyday of Mary Pickford. Stars get whole chapters dedicated to their various scandals; prepare for stories about Jean Harlow, Mae West, and James Dean.

Courtesy of Plume.

Tab Hunter Confidential

In his autobiography (later made into a documentary, available on Netflix), actor Tab Hunter spoke freely about his acting and singing career, which began in the 1950s. The actor also shed light on his personal life, revealing his relationships with men like Pyscho star Anthony Perkins and ice-skater Ronnie Robertson. He also dished on what it was like working with studio heads like Jack Warner and getting set up on publicity tours with actresses like Natalie Wood and Debbie Reynolds. (Photo: Tab Hunter photographed in an LA court during the trial of Confidential magazine in August 1957.)

From Everett Collection.

Tinseltown: Murder, Morphine, and Madness at the Dawn of Hollywood

This 2014 book by William Mann is a nifty crossover for old Hollywood and true-crime fans, a deep dive on the 1922 murder of noted director William Desmond Taylor. Tinseltown also folds in rumors and figures of the era, making special note of power players like Paramount Pictures founder Adolph Zukor (whose nickname was simply “Creepy”) and many, many others.

Courtesy of Harper Paperbacks.

The Sewing Circle

Hollywood is the sort of place where actors can win awards for playing members of the L.G.B.T.Q. community, but openly gay actors risk possibly being thrust out of the business. Actors largely kept their mouths shut about their sexuality in the days of Old Hollywood, leaving a few clues to history as to how they might have truly identified. In the 1995 book The Sewing Circle, author Axel Madsen writes about the rumored bisexual or lesbian actresses in the industry, from Garbo to Crawford, detailing how they navigated their private lives away from the public eye. The book’s title is the nickname for the industry’s closeted community. (Photo: Greta Garbo in the 1931 film Susan Lenox- Her Fall and Rise.)